Can't Join The Club: London Marathon 'Ever-Presents'

Today marks the 32nd annual London Marathon. Summer Olympic hopeful Wilson Kipsang won the men's race, while fellow Kenyan Mary Keitany won the women's for a second consecutive year. Others? Well, Vicki Barker met the event's most seasoned veterans - the so-called Ever-Presents, who've run in all 31 previous marathons. Time is reducing their numbers, she says, but not their enthusiasm.

(SOUNDBITE OF RAIN FALLING)

VICKI BARKER, BYLINE: Rain - a splashy, chilly, even-by-London-standards heavy spring rain, falling in the final training days leading up to the marathon, forecast for the day itself. Steve Wehrle can tell you about rain.

STEVE WEHRLE: The years do get a bit muddled, but there was a year where it rained. It was raining before it started, so we were wet before it started.

BARKER: Wehrle and his fellow Ever-Presents are the walking - or shall we say jogging - institutional memory of the London Marathon.

WEHRLE: That day, I got wet and dried out four times. And by the time I got to the end of the race, I was very, very cold - and very, very fed up.

BARKER: New York native Roger Low remembers the very first London marathon in 1981, run before a sparse and bemused audience.

ROGER LOW: There were a lot of areas where there was nobody along the roadside; nobody quite knew what to do. But now, everybody's cheering, making a lot of noise; and giving food and fruit, and stuff like that, to people along the way. So it's a great experience.

BARKER: The oldest Ever-Present is 78. The youngest are in their 50s. It's a bit of an overstatement to call them a club.

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: What's his name - Lee...

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: There's only one. Tony...

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: Tony...

BARKER: Some of the Ever-Presents don't even show up for the annual photo. These are, after all, just random runners who happened to share the accidental good fortune of winning a place in that first, and following, marathons. It was 15 years before they won official recognition for their longevity. That year, they numbered 42. This year they were down to 17, say Roger Low and David Walker.

LOW: We like to say that this is a club that no one can join.

DAVID WALKER: We can only leave it - and we all will, at some point.

(SOUNDBITE OF LAUGHTER)

BARKER: When these men first ran this course, their bodies were well-oiled machines, and it was all about reaching their personal best. Nowadays, says Mike Peel, it's more about the journey than the destination.

MIKE PEEL: There's a big difference between racing and running. And these days, we're just running - or trotting 'round. I know that we won't be last in the race, but we're disappointed that we can't run like we used to run.

BARKER: In a sense, then, the Ever-Presents have been acting out a slow-motion confrontation with their own mortality, determined to remain moving targets right up to that finish line.